Abstract

Gamete maturation and spawning in starfish is triggered by a gonad‐stimulating substance (GSS), which is present in extracts of the radial nerve cords. Purification of GSS from the starfish Patiria pectinifera identified GSS as a relaxin‐like polypeptide, which is now known as relaxin‐like gonad‐stimulating peptide (RGP). Cells expressing RGP in the radial nerve cord of P. pectinifera have been visualized, but the presence of RGP‐expressing cells in other parts of the starfish body has not been investigated. Here we addressed this issue in the starfish Asterias rubens. An A. rubens RGP (AruRGP) precursor cDNA was sequenced and the A chain and B chain that form AruRGP were detected in A. rubens radial nerve cord extracts using mass spectrometry. Comparison of the bioactivity of AruRGP and P. pectinifera RGP (PpeRGP) revealed that both polypeptides induce oocyte maturation and ovulation in A. rubens ovarian fragments, but AruRGP is more potent than PpeRGP. Analysis of the expression of AruRGP in A. rubens using mRNA in situ hybridization revealed cells expressing RGP in the radial nerve cords, circumoral nerve ring, and tube feet. Furthermore, a band of RGP‐expressing cells was identified in the body wall epithelium lining the cavity that surrounds the sensory terminal tentacle and optic cushion at the tips of the arms. Discovery of these RGP‐expressing cells closely associated with sensory organs in the arm tips is an important finding because these cells are candidate physiological mediators for hormonal control of starfish spawning in response to environmental cues. J. Comp. Neurol. 525:1599–1617, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Highlights

  • Control of reproductive maturation and function in animals is regulated by a variety of polypeptide hormones

  • We report here the identification and functional characterization of relaxin-like gonad-stimulating peptide in the starfish A. rubens (AruRGP)

  • A. rubens RGP (AruRGP) shares 87% sequence identity with RGP from Aphelasterias japonica, which belongs to the same order and family as Asterias (Order Forcipulatida; Family Asteriidae), and only 65% sequence identity with RGP from P. pectinifera (PpeRGP), which belongs to a different order of starfish (Order Valvatida; Family Asterinidae)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Control of reproductive maturation and function in animals is regulated by a variety of polypeptide hormones. Gonadotropic hormones identified in invertebrates include egg-laying hormone (ELH) in mollusks, which is related to vertebrate corticotropin-releasing. Library hormone (CRH) (Chiu et al, 1979; Conn and Kaczmarek, 1989), and an insulin-like peptide that regulates egg maturation in the mosquito Aedes aegypti (Brown et al, 2008). The first report of a gonadotropic substance in an invertebrate was the observation that extracts of radial nerve cords from the starfish Asterias forbesi induce shedding of gametes when injected in this species (Chaet and McConnaughy, 1959). Aam RGP Aja RGP AP AruRGP AruRLP2 ASW BCIP CL CONR CRH DIG Ec EC50 ELH Ep FSH GnRH GSS Hy IGF LH ML MS NBT OC PBS PBST PCR PFA PMSF Ppe RG Sp SSC Su TF TT

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call